December 9, 2005
Training, prevention
top agenda at search and rescue conference
Three-day meet draws
SAR volunteers from across Nunavut
SARA
MINOGUE
Miki
Akavak fills up on gas before heading out during a five-day search and rescue
that found only one of two missing men alive in May. RCMP Cpl. Jimmy Akavak
and Jimi Noble Jr. planned to use that search for "a frank discussion of
what went wrong and what went right" with search and rescue volunteers
attending a conference in Iqaluit this week. (FILE PHOTO)
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There were several frost-bitten
faces among the crowd of nearly 40 people gathered in Iqaluit's Frobisher Inn
for a three-day search and rescue conference that started this past Tuesday.
Search and rescue leaders
and volunteers from each of Nunavut's communities met to talk about training,
searching, and prevention. The goal of the event was to share information from
different communities, with the aim of improving local search and rescue operations.
Participants were also
to discuss what they need in the communities to conduct effective searches,
and to prevent more searches from happening at all.
Alan McIntosh, Nunavut's
director of protection services, planned to present some of the ideas discussed
at the conference to government, in order to improve protection services.
"We don't set policy...
I don't set policy. But we can influence policy," McIntosh said, as he
ran through the agenda on Tuesday morning.
One highlight of the conference
was scheduled for Wednesday, when Iqaluit search and rescue leaders Jimmy Akavak
and Jimi Noble Jr. were to deliver a "frank discussion of what went wrong
and what went right" during the five-day search and rescue in Iqaluit in
May, which turned up only one of two missing men alive.
Three workshops were planned
for the search and rescue volunteers.
The first, on Tuesday,
was to look at organizing a search, and the processes involved. Nunavut's director
of protection services, Alan McIntosh, said he would offer some thoughts on
"the principles of leadership" before this workshop began.
On Wednesday, participants
planned to talk about training. In particular, what training people who aren't
familiar with the land should have.
"Unfortunately up
here, we have a lot of people who go out on the land on weekends and think they
have the survival skills they need," McIntosh said.
Participants were asked
to consider what training everyone should have, and what training some SAR volunteers
should have.
The final workshop on Thursday
was to address prevention.
In 2004, 97 searches were
recorded, and four deaths. That number doesn't include local searches that don't
require resources from headquarters in Iqaluit.
To help cut down on the
number of serachs, McIntosh said, volunteers would be reminded to fill out forms
describing the cause of the search. That information could be used to help target
specific groups, such as young people or southerners, who cause the most searches.
On Thursday, Community
and Government Services Minister Levinia Brown planned to unveil a new safety
campaign for people going out on the land.
Search and rescue groups
also looked forward to getting new GPS equipment, binoculars and first aid kits,
purchased with the $500,000 funding from CGS offered this year only to enhance
Nunavut's search and rescue. Funding for the conference also came from this
pot.
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